Literature DB >> 3433964

Hot particles in the environment: assessment of dose and health detriment.

W Burkart1, H Linder.   

Abstract

Hot particles, highly radioactive particles made up of fission products or actinides and being small enough to become airborne, defy many of the dose models and risk concepts in use by the health physics community. At environmental exposures, both on the level of populations and tissues, dose distributions become very skewed; only few persons or tissue cells being exposed at correspondingly higher levels. Fallout from Chernobyl showed a numerically small subfraction of the aerosol particles containing activities of up to 10 kBq 103-ruthenium or up to 0.3 Bq 242-curium in single particles. The implications of these hot particles on the dosimetry after uptake are great since the locally accumulated dose, for example in the pulmonary region, may reach up to 10 MSv. For inhalation as well as for ingestion, theoretical considerations predict a decrease in the effectiveness of particulate radioactivity as compared to monomeric activity. This hypothesis is also supported by experimental and epidemiological evidence from the examination of the radiation effects of particulate alpha-emitters deposited in the lung.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3433964     DOI: 10.1007/BF02078168

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soz Praventivmed        ISSN: 0303-8408


  6 in total

1.  Plutonium--health implications for man. The importance of non-uniform dose-distribution in an organ.

Authors:  C R Richmond
Journal:  Health Phys       Date:  1975-10       Impact factor: 1.316

2.  Agricultural impact of Chernobyl: a warning.

Authors:  C Hohenemser; M Deicher; H Hofsäss; G Lindner; E Recknagel; J I Budnick
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1986 Jun 26-Jul 2       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Manhattan Project plutonium workers: a twenty-seven year follow-up study of selected cases.

Authors:  L H Hempelmann; W H Langham; C R Richmond; G L Voelz
Journal:  Health Phys       Date:  1973-11       Impact factor: 1.316

4.  Quantitative assessment of carcinogenic risks associated with 'hot particles'.

Authors:  W V Mayneord; R H Clarke
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1976-02-19       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Evaluation of lung burden following acute inhalation exposure to highly insoluble PuO2.

Authors:  J R Mann; R A Kirchner
Journal:  Health Phys       Date:  1967-08       Impact factor: 1.316

6.  The carcinogenic effect of localized fission fragment irradiation of rat lung.

Authors:  A L Batchelor; P Buckley; D J Gore; T J Jenner; I R Major; M R Bailey
Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol Relat Stud Phys Chem Med       Date:  1980-03
  6 in total
  1 in total

1.  New horizons in microparticle forensics: Actinide imaging and detection of 238Pu and 242mAm in hot particles.

Authors:  Hauke Bosco; Linda Hamann; Nina Kneip; Manuel Raiwa; Martin Weiss; Klaus Wendt; Clemens Walther
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-10-29       Impact factor: 14.136

  1 in total

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